Have you ever wanted to ask a cop a question but have either been too
afraid or had warrants? Well, now is your chance to ask through the
safety of the Internet. Today's discussion is about the police and fire
rivalry.

Last July, Brent Klovstad with Enterprise Rent-a-Car received news
from his employer that he was being transferred from Orange County
to Salt Lake City. He knew less than a handful of people in Utah, but
after moving he turned to United Way of Salt Lake's Young Leaders to
help change that.

The body of a Wellington man was found Thursday near his Jeep at the bottom of a 300-foot cliff. The Carbon County Sheriff's Office says it appears the man committed suicide, but an autopsy has been ordered.

What happens when a road rage incident gets way
out of hand, leaving his family scared to be in
their own home. One Herriman man was forced to
answer that question when a driver started a
fight, then showed up at his home to do more
damage.

Many of Utah reservoirs' water levels are far
below normal during this year's drought. State
hydrologists have said it will only get worse:
Utahans tend to use more water in July and
August than any other time of the year.

When common cold symptoms turned into something much less common for an Eagle Mountain mother of two, her life was dramatically altered. Now, a local charity is hosting a sweet event to help her battle a rare autoimmune disease.

It could be just a mild bump in the road for the special committee assigned to investigate Attorney General John Swallow: The Speaker of the House will decide this week whether the chairman has a conflict of interest, or whether he can continue that work.

If you've ever had to deal with large medical
bills, you probably know the pain of trying
to make sense of all the charges. Orem
resident Ruth Cuell received a bill for an
ambulance ride that she didn't think was
fair. A KSL investigation revealed that when
it comes to cracking medical codes, the bill
doesn't always tell the full story.

The lakes and reservoirs are shockingly low.
Rivers are drier than they've been in years and
the roads are buckling under the blazing sun.
Fifteen days of 100-degree weather or higher is
causing all kinds of problems, and has people
talking about what to do.

Can you imagine loving your summer job so much
that you never leave it? An American Fork man
who has spent 45 years leading tours at
Timpanogos Cave after taking a summer job there
knows exactly what it's like to love a job that
much.

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